|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 22, 2023 14:55:47 GMT -5
A Town Called RiverIgor Rendić, 2021 After an over twenty year absence, the main character, Paul, returns to the city of his birth, Rijeka (on the northern Croatian coast), after the death of his beloved grandmother. While there, he is informed by a childhood friend, Katrina, that there was more to his grandmother, Lena, then he knew, and that he had inherited more from her than her apartment in the downtown area. Lena was, in fact, a krsnik – a sort of shaman or healer, but depending on the folk tale, also a shapeshifter (they usually turn into wolves, but also other animals) – and something of a protector of the city who had helped many people when they were having problems with the supernatural. And now it seems that Paul – like it or not – has inherited her powers, and also, apparently, some of the loose ends of her life. As he begins to contend with the fact that magic is real and his possible role in this world he never knew existed, he’s assisted by Katrina, who has low-lever supernatural abilities herself (she can see and talk to ghosts) and her two friends – both of whom are honest-to-gosh witches (the good kind, well, mostly good). This is a very well written, thoroughly enjoyable book; I highly recommend it. The publisher is the same as the book of Slavic myth-based short stories I reviewed upthread, so you can visit the site for links to the ebook if nothing else. The title of the book, by the way, is a reference to the fact that Rijeka literally means ‘river.’
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jun 27, 2023 22:53:00 GMT -5
Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
I apparently never wrote a review for this... I didn't realize just how long ago I read it. I had planned to not read it again until (now a forlorn hope) the 3rd book finally came out, but my local book club decided they wanted to torture themselves.
I have to say I didn't like it as much... perhaps my opinion is colored, but in alot of ways the book itself is like Kvothe. Unique, endearing, but annoyinging too clever by half. It leads you to a good place, then crashes down again out of nowhere just to ensure there is tension and drama for the next chapter.
I've always described this book as 'a better version of Harry Potter, written for adults'. But perhaps (and again, this is definitely colored by the status of the series) more correctly it is 'an evil version of Harry Potter for sadists'
I still like the framing sequence better than the main story... All I need to know really is how he lost himself, then move on. Alas, this will never happen... this is why I rarely will read a book that's not a finished series these days.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jun 28, 2023 11:57:28 GMT -5
One Corpse Too Many by Ellis PetersBrother Cadfael is back and this time the war between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda finds its way to Shrewsbury and to the Abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul. Following the siege of Shrewsbury Castle Cadfael is charged with taking care of the bodies of the defenders ordered hung by King Stephen. While doing so, he finds that there is one body too many...and that that one has been murdered, because we have to have a mystery, now don't we? In addition to this mystery we have a missing fortune that was supposed to be spirited away to Normandy and Empress Matilda, a young person in hiding in the Abbey, a love triangle and a worthy intellectual foe for Cadfael, who may or may not be up to no good. There's a lot going on here. I struggled with this one a little bit at to about the 2/3 mark, though part of that may well have been that it just wasn't what my brain wanted to read at the time. But Peters really nailed the third act and ultimately it's a very good medieval mystery.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,210
|
Post by Confessor on Jun 28, 2023 16:22:42 GMT -5
One Corpse Too Many by Ellis PetersBrother Cadfael is back and this time the war between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda finds its way to Shrewsbury and to the Abbey of St. Peter and St. Paul. Following the siege of Shrewsbury Castle Cadfael is charged with taking care of the bodies of the defenders ordered hung by King Stephen. While doing so, he finds that there is one body too many...and that that one has been murdered, because we have to have a mystery, now don't we? In addition to this mystery we have a missing fortune that was supposed to be spirited away to Normandy and Empress Matilda, a young person in hiding in the Abbey, a love triangle and a worthy intellectual foe for Cadfael, who may or may not be up to no good. There's a lot going on here. I struggled with this one a little bit at to about the 2/3 mark, though part of that may well have been that it just wasn't what my brain wanted to read at the time. But Peters really nailed the third act and ultimately it's a very good medieval mystery. My mother-in-law absolutely loves the Cadfeal books. Myself, I can't say they've ever really appealed to me; something about Medieval crime whodunnits just doesn't do it for me, I'm afraid. But I'm quite prepared to believe that they are very well written books, as her other two literary loves are Agatha Christie's Poirot and Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, both of which are obviously classics.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 1, 2023 9:49:47 GMT -5
Friday the rabbi Slept late Harry Kemelman
I picked this up at a used book store last summer.. the cover and the title grabbed me (though, funnily enough, my version isn't among the 69 copies listed by Goodreads.. its lighter blue,and shows the murder victim running, not already dead).
It's an odd little book. Definitely written in the style of Agatha Christie's Ms. Marple, where the 'main' character isn't actually the investigator,but rather pops around the edges of the case. It's set in a fictional Boston suburb of Barnard's Crossing, but, despite the author being a local (or so says his bio), it doesn't resemble a Boston suburb in the least, and mentions Lynn and Salem as if they are important local destinations, which certainly is not the case now, and would have been less so in the 60s. It definitely feels more like a Agatha Christie London town.
Add the rabbi in, who is fast friends with the chief of police and a bit of a busy body, and you have this weird mash up of Christie and Father Brown.
The mystery itself completely ignores the obvious suspect... briefly comes back to him towards the end (the rabbi is one himself, even though never really seriously), and the actual murderer is found out of the blue by the rabbi. There's quite a bit about the Jewish community in the book and some philsophy even, but presented a lot better than in Chesteron. (Father Brown is far better in the PBS show then the actual stories are)
definitely a fun read for a random 'I judged the book by the cover' book.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 1, 2023 11:13:04 GMT -5
They Don't Dance Much by James Ross One of those "great lost" books that were praised by another great author (in this case Raymond Chandler) that largely disappeared from sight and was seldom reprinted. This was Ross' first and only novel though he wrote a few short stories and was a reporter. This would be an early example of "country noir" of the sort that would be popularized by Charles Williams being published by Fawcett Gold Medal. Apparently this book was compared to James M. Cain at the time of publication which allegedly upset Ross. I personally don't see it. Cain is a much more succinct writer. But I also can't see taking umbrage at being compared to Cain. Jack McDonald is a failed farmer just kind of floating through life at the tail end of the Depression. What little he owns is mortgaged to the hilt and about to be repossessed and/or sold for taxes. He takes a job with Smut Milligan, local bad-boy and small-time entrepreneur, who is starting up a roadhouse just outside town and on the road to Florida. The place deals in bootleg liquor, dance music, and cabins that can rent by the hour. And it's a surprise success. But for all that success, Milligan still has money problems and the local political boss eyeing his little roadhouse for a hostile takeover. Being a true noir there's a murder and a femme fatale. And Jack McDonald definitely gets himself in over his head. Compared to most of his contemporaries, and certainly to the later Gold Medal authors, Ross takes this one at a pretty leisurely pace. I was honestly not really feeling it for the first half of the book. It was fine and it was well written, but I just wanted it to get to the point a little faster. It does finish strong. In fact the ultimate ending is incredibly satisfying. Is it a lost masterpiece? I don't think so. But it definitely didn't deserve to be ignored. If it's not the equivalent of Chandler (what is?) or the best of Cain, it's easily as good as or better than better known novels by other contemporaries like Horace McCoy or W.R. Burnett.
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jul 4, 2023 16:02:49 GMT -5
Fuzzy NationJohn Scalzi, 2011 So, upthread I reviewed the three books about the Fuzzies written by H. Beam Piper ( here and here); this one, according to Scalzi himself in the introduction, is a sort of ‘reboot’ of those original tales. There are some other follow-up Fuzzy books written by other authors, but they are set in the same ‘universe’ as Piper’s originals, and I’m not really interested in reading those. I was really interested in this one, though, because 1) Scalzi is a really good writer, and 2) I was curious to see if he would address some of the misgivings I had about Piper’s stories. And I’m happy to say that he really delivers. In the most basic sense, the plot is the same as Piper’s first novel, Little Fuzzy: an independent gem prospector and surveyor named Jack Holloway living and working on a planet basically owned by the Zarathustra Company one day finds a small furry bipedal creature about the size of a house cat in his cabin and, after alerting a biologist friend, they realize that these ‘Fuzzies’ are a sentient species. This sets off a chain of events that ends with a court-room drama to settle the issue. However, Scalzi indeed gives the story a modern sensibility, and throws in a few really unexpected twists. It pays tribute to Piper’s books in the best way, even while it underscores some of their problematic aspects. Altogether: very entertaining and satisfying.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 4, 2023 17:04:47 GMT -5
Perry rhodan #28: Plague of Oblivion by Clark Darlton
It seems the problem of the Springers is too much for the writers, too. Suddenly Perry and Co have access to a virus that erases your memory, but only for a little while, but really makes you smarter in the end?
Just a bit much, and where did such a thing come from? Combine that with the fact that Pucky seems to be an invincible juggernaut, and there's not alot of tension or drama here. Hopefully, they'll move on next book.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,210
|
Post by Confessor on Jul 5, 2023 11:42:32 GMT -5
As Time Goes By by Derek Taylor. First published in 1973, Derek Taylor's As Time Goes By is a fascinating and very readable glimpse into the workings of the mid-to-late '60s pop music revolution. For those who may not know, Taylor was the Beatles' press officer throughout 1964 – the peak year of Beatlemania – and then relocated to California in 1965 to perform the same service for the likes of the Byrds, the Beach Boys, the Doors, the Mamas and the Papas, and Captain Beefheart, before returning to the Fab Four's employ when they launched Apple Records in 1968. Suffice it to say, this was a man who was at the very heart of the '60s music scene and also a trusted confidant of the Beatles. I've always liked the cut of Taylor's jib whenever I've seen him talking in documentaries and the like. He's a very eloquent and astute guy, with a nicely self-effacing take on his role in the era. There are some great little turns of phrase in this book too, which make it a real pleasure to read. As Time Goes By was one of the very first memoirs to be written by one of the Beatles' inner circle and I have to say that I think it's still probably one of the best. I found it a thoroughly engrossing book, made all the better by having been written only a few years after the events it describes happened, while memories were still fresh and before the Beatles became canonized in the public consciousness as a near mythic rock group.
|
|
|
Post by berkley on Jul 5, 2023 16:19:48 GMT -5
As Time Goes By by Derek Taylor. First published in 1973, Derek Taylor's As Time Goes By is a fascinating and very readable glimpse into the workings of the mid-to-late '60s pop music revolution. For those who may not know, Taylor was the Beatles' press officer throughout 1964 – the peak year of Beatlemania – and then relocated to California in 1965 to perform the same service for the likes of the Byrds, the Beach Boys, the Doors, the Mamas and the Papas, and Captain Beefheart, before returning to the Fab Four's employ when they launched Apple Records in 1968. Suffice it to say, this was a man who was at the very heart of the '60s music scene and also a trusted confidant of the Beatles. I've always liked the cut of Taylor's jib whenever I've seen him talking in documentaries and the like. He's a very eloquent and astute guy, with a nicely self-effacing take on his role in the era. There are some great little turns of phrase in this book too, which make it a real pleasure to read. As Time Goes By was one of the very first memoirs to be written by one of the Beatles' inner circle and I have to say that I think it's still probably one of the best. I found it a thoroughly engrossing book, made all the better by having been written only a few years after the events it describes happened, while memories were still fresh and before the Beatles became canonized in the public consciousness as a near mythic rock group.
To my surprise I don't think I heard of this until now - at least, I didn't have it on my huge list of things I'd like to read some time in the future. Definitely on there now. I'm much more attracted to things like this or to a good documentary than to these biopics that have become such the rage the last few years, with some actor playing a famous person of whom there is tons of video footage available for people to see and hear the real person.
|
|
|
Post by EdoBosnar on Jul 10, 2023 6:48:09 GMT -5
Marathon ManWilliam Goldman, 1974 Before I started reading this, I hadn’t realized that the novel was written/published before the movie was made (I’d assumed that Goldman had simply adapted his screenplay as a movie tie-in rather than the other way around). Anyway, I have to say that I have many of the same misgivings about the book as I do the movie – while I liked many elements of it, I found it a bit unsatisfying, because it’s unclear if it’s supposed to be an espionage thriller or a more non-genre psychological study of its main character, ‘Babe’ Levy. In the case of the book, I also thought there was a lot of rather clunky dialogue, which I don’t’ recall thinking about the movie. And there’s a little too much of Babe’s inner monologues, which start to become tiresome as the story progresses. However, I think the ending in the book – which is slightly different from the movie – is better, although it’s more of a downer. Also, after reading this, I can see that Dustin Hoffman was kind of miscast as the main character; in the book Babe Levy is described as this really tall, skinny – almost gawky – guy, none of which can be used as descriptors for Hoffman. (It’s kind of like the case of the movie Little Big Man – the way the main character is described in the book looks absolutely nothing like Hoffman, who played him in the movie.)
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 11, 2023 16:25:52 GMT -5
Isaac's Storm by Erik LarsonPopular history author Erik Larson takes on the Great Galveston hurricane of 1900 with a focus on Isaac Cline, the chief meteorologist at the US Weather Bureau's Galveston office. The hurricane remains the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history with at least an estimated 6,000 dead and over $34 million in property damage (well over $1.1 billion in current dollars). Larson tries to strip away the myths surrounding the storm. Cline's heroic tales of his exploits seem to have little basis in fact. While the storm would have been an utter disaster under any circumstances, its effects were exacerbated by the hubris of the institutions and individuals involved. Hurricanes, still the subject of a lot of scientific mystery, were barely understood at all at the time. But it didn't help that the U.S. Weather Bureau would go to almost any lengths at the time to avoid the words hurricane or tornado to keep from panicking the frightened masses. It also didn't help that they were in a pissing contest with the Belen College Observatory in Havana, which had significantly more experience studying and tracking hurricanes because they were just Cubans and were being occupied by the U.S. following the Spanish-American War. The Weather Service also declared that the storm had turned and was headed up the west Florida coast based on absolutely nothing other than the belief that that is what storms did. Beyond the institutional hubris there was individual hubris. Cline had declared that is was "impossible" that Galveston could ever be significantly damaged by a storm (though Indiola, Texas had been hammered 25 years before) and talked the city out of building seawalls. All of this was, of course, hushed up and there was a significant release of "alternative facts" to indicate that the Weather Bureau had provided ample warning and that Cline had heroically gone door to door warning people of the storm like a latter-day Paul Revere. And yet for all that this is an interesting and exciting story, Larson tries super hard to make it a snoozer. Maybe I just wasn't in the mood or was reading at the wrong times, but this one didn't flow very well. And I remember that the previous book that I'd read by Larson "Devil in the White City" was about a half an interesting book, grafted on to about half a marginally interesting book. So maybe it's just that Larson's writing doesn't quite work for me. Still, it's a decent read and it's actually pretty timely as we see hurricanes becoming increasingly destructive.
|
|
|
Post by wildfire2099 on Jul 12, 2023 10:36:16 GMT -5
A Secret Atlas Michael Stackpole
I'd had this book on my to read list for a long time (back when I looked up this guy I hadn't heard of before that was writing Star Wars novels. A book with a focus on exploring and making maps sounded pretty different.
This year's summer reading challenge at the library required a book with a map on the cover, so this one sprung to mind again. It's very ambitious.. tell the story of 5 different main characters in turn. I think it was too much.. things did not progress very far, and while each part was pretty interesting, the whole was a slog.
Just when things started to be interesting, it fell apart. First, he makes the only female lead a sex fiend and Fridges her (though by the descriptions of the other books she might come back some how), and then in the last 40 pages everything falls completely apart.
That's not the sort of cliffhanger that makes me want to read the next book, it makes me write off the series.. and probably just as well, since the rest sounds like pretty standard fare.
The interesting bits about how good maps and knowledge of the land was powerful were quickly glossed over and taken for granted, when that was the part that I was hoping to see explored. Instead, we got to very standard quests and some misogyny that was hard to read.
The concept of becoming so skilled at something you become essentially a Jedi and live almost forever was pretty fun too.. but again, wasn't nearly explored enough for my liking, as the swordsman and his apprentice that introduced the concept turned out to be minor characters.
Overall, it's probably better than I'm rating it, but it loses extra points on missed potential.
|
|
Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,210
|
Post by Confessor on Jul 13, 2023 8:51:31 GMT -5
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard. First published in 1885, King Soloman's Mines is regarded as a classic of English Victorian adventure literature and one of the first "lost world" novels. Set in the mid-nineteenth century, the plot follows white hunter Allan Quatermain as he takes on a quest for two Englishmen, Sir Henry Curtis and Captain Good, to find Curtis's brother, who went missing searching for the fabled mines of King Soloman in the unexplored interior of southern Africa. Though it might be widely considered a classic, I don't think King Soloman's Mines has aged particularly well. For one thing, the book is chock full of the colonial attitudes of its era, with the white heroes gleefully exploiting the native African population for treasure. Of course, this isn't too surprising, given the era in which the book was written, but even though I have a very high tolerance of archaic values and attitudes in old literature, the thinly and not-so-thinly-veiled racism on display here is pretty unrelenting. The three central protagonists all regard the Africans with an extremely patronising air of superiority, becoming disgusted if a Zulu man dares to address them as equals, for instance. Interestingly, Quatermain considers himself to not be particularly prejudiced against the Africans, noting early on in the book that he will never resort to using the "n-word", but he also clearly regards them as little more than ignorant, superstitious children. Then there's the appalling attitude our heroes display towards the African fauna. Only a day or two into their expedition, Quatermain and his cohorts are only too happy to kill a herd of elephants for their ivory, slaughter a few lions for kicks, and shoot a random giraffe through the neck in the name of sportsmanship. Like I say, I realise that inflicting such carnage on innocent wildlife was considered fair game in the Victorian era, but that doesn't make it any more enjoyable to read about in the 21st century or particularly engender sympathy from the reader towards the book's protagonists. A far more serious problem for the book, however, is Haggard's stodgy and unnecessarily verbose prose, which made it a bit of a slog to finish. I think that this may just be a symptom of the writing style of the Victorian/Edwardian era, as I've noticed similar problems with the writing of Rudyard Kipling, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and H. P. Lovecraft, to name just three contemporary authors. It's also very much written for men and boys: there are no women of any consequence in the story at all and any that do appear are treated as eye-candy for the men. On the plus side, the central adventure narrative itself is pretty enjoyable and the witch, Gagool, is a very creepy character and perhaps the most memorable in the book for that precise reason. But my God, the pace of this thing is painfully slow! Clearly King Soloman's Mines is an extremely influential novel – it's easy to see the template for Indiana Jones in Quatermain, for example – but I can't honestly see the turgid pace and unpalatable colonial attitudes herein going down well with the majority of modern readers. This really wasn't a particularly enjoyable book for me, which is a shame because I've wanted to read it for ages.
|
|
|
Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 13, 2023 9:16:10 GMT -5
King Solomon's Mines by H. Rider Haggard. It's been eons since I've read any Haggard. I'm pretty inured to the casual racism of the period but the old-fashioned prose tends to do me in at this point. I wonder how it would hold up for me.
|
|